shuk

English

Etymology

From Hebrew שוק. Doublet of souq.

Noun

shuk

  1. An Israeli street market.

Achang

Etymology

From Proto-Sino-Tibetan *srəwk (to drink, suck).

Pronunciation

  • (Myanmar) /ʃuk˧/
  • (Lianghe) [suʔ⁵⁵]
  • (Longchuan) [ʂoʔ⁵⁵]
  • (Luxi) [suʔ⁵⁵]
  • (Xiandao) [ʂuʔ⁵⁵]

Verb

shuk

  1. to drink

Further reading

  • Inglis, Douglas, Sampu, Nasaw, Jaseng, Wilai, Jana, Thocha (2005) A preliminary Ngochang–Kachin–English Lexicon[1], Payap University, page 119

Albanian

Alternative forms

Etymology

From Proto-Albanian *uka, from Proto-Indo-European *u̯ek (to bend). Cognate to Sanskrit वच्यते (vacyáte, to fly up).[1]

Verb

shuk (aorist shuka, participle shukur)

  1. to press, beat, push, shake

Conjugation

Noun

shuk m (plural shuka, definite shuku, definite plural shukat)

  1. ball (of clothes, thread, paper etc.)

Declension

Declension of shuk
singular plural
indefinite definite indefinite definite
nominative shuk shuku shuka shukat
accusative shukun
dative shuku shukut shukave shukave
ablative shukash

Derived terms

References

  1. ^ Orel, Vladimir E. (1998) “shuk”, in Albanian Etymological Dictionary, Leiden, Boston, Köln: Brill, →ISBN, page 445

Czech

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): [ˈzɦuk]

Noun

shuk m inan

  1. (dialectal) alternative form of shluk

Declension

Further reading

Jingpho

Etymology

Borrowed from Burmese ရှုပ် (hrup).

Adjective

shuk

  1. messy

References

  • Kurabe, Keita (31 December 2016) “Phonology of Burmese loanwords in Jinghpaw”, in Kyoto University Linguistic Research[2], volume 35, →DOI, →ISSN, pages 91–128